Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy

Oppressed, outvoted, and outgunned, minority shareholders have an obvious solution for their woes: vote with their feet, sell their shares, and leave the company. But this “Wall Street Rule” is only available to shareholders in publicly listed corporations; shareholders in close corporations—privat...

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Main Author: Koh, Alan K.
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155255
https://www.transnat.org/post/shareholder-protection-in-close-corporations-and-the-curious-case-of-japan
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1552552023-05-19T07:31:17Z Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy Koh, Alan K. Nanyang Business School Business::Law::Business enterprises Business::Law::In Asia::Japan Japan Comparative Corporate Law Oppressed, outvoted, and outgunned, minority shareholders have an obvious solution for their woes: vote with their feet, sell their shares, and leave the company. But this “Wall Street Rule” is only available to shareholders in publicly listed corporations; shareholders in close corporations—privately owned business entities with no market for their shares—do not have the option of easy exit. Legal solutions which enable the shareholder to voluntarily exit a company with their capital such as the oppression or unfair prejudice remedies in US and Anglo-Commonwealth corporate law—what this Article classifies as “withdrawal remedies”—are therefore vital in close corporations. However, until relatively recently, shareholders in Japan’s close corporations had no access to withdrawal under corporate law, as neither of Japan’s then-dominant close corporation forms offered it. By revealing how shareholder litigants, attorneys, and judges in Japan responded to the absence of withdrawal, this Article shows how Japan’s experience was no outlier among nations, but instead powerfully demonstrates the importance of withdrawal remedies in practice. Later, withdrawal remedies at law for close corporations became available in Japan for the first time with the watershed Kaisha-hō (Companies Act) of 2005, which introduced a new close corporation form, the Gōdō Kaisha (GK). This Article analyzes the challenges facing Japan’s new withdrawal regime and shows how comparative corporate law—armed with the law and experience of withdrawal in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany—offers valuable insights for the development of withdrawal in the world’s second largest developed economy. Nanyang Technological University Published version The Author gratefully acknowledges funding and support from Nagoya University, Max Planck Society’s Grant for Visiting Fellows, National University of Singapore Faculty of Law Centre for Asian Legal Studies (CALS) Ad Hoc Grants, and NTU Start-Up Grant 04INS000773C300. 2022-04-12T01:34:01Z 2022-04-12T01:34:01Z 2020 Journal Article Koh, A. K. (2020). Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy. Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 53(4), 1207-1264. 0090-2594 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155255 https://www.transnat.org/post/shareholder-protection-in-close-corporations-and-the-curious-case-of-japan 4 53 1207 1264 en 04INS000773C300 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law © 2020 Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law and is made available with permission of Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Law::Business enterprises
Business::Law::In Asia::Japan
Japan
Comparative Corporate Law
spellingShingle Business::Law::Business enterprises
Business::Law::In Asia::Japan
Japan
Comparative Corporate Law
Koh, Alan K.
Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
description Oppressed, outvoted, and outgunned, minority shareholders have an obvious solution for their woes: vote with their feet, sell their shares, and leave the company. But this “Wall Street Rule” is only available to shareholders in publicly listed corporations; shareholders in close corporations—privately owned business entities with no market for their shares—do not have the option of easy exit. Legal solutions which enable the shareholder to voluntarily exit a company with their capital such as the oppression or unfair prejudice remedies in US and Anglo-Commonwealth corporate law—what this Article classifies as “withdrawal remedies”—are therefore vital in close corporations. However, until relatively recently, shareholders in Japan’s close corporations had no access to withdrawal under corporate law, as neither of Japan’s then-dominant close corporation forms offered it. By revealing how shareholder litigants, attorneys, and judges in Japan responded to the absence of withdrawal, this Article shows how Japan’s experience was no outlier among nations, but instead powerfully demonstrates the importance of withdrawal remedies in practice. Later, withdrawal remedies at law for close corporations became available in Japan for the first time with the watershed Kaisha-hō (Companies Act) of 2005, which introduced a new close corporation form, the Gōdō Kaisha (GK). This Article analyzes the challenges facing Japan’s new withdrawal regime and shows how comparative corporate law—armed with the law and experience of withdrawal in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany—offers valuable insights for the development of withdrawal in the world’s second largest developed economy.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Koh, Alan K.
format Article
author Koh, Alan K.
author_sort Koh, Alan K.
title Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
title_short Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
title_full Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
title_fullStr Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
title_full_unstemmed Shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of Japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
title_sort shareholder protection in close corporations and the curious case of japan : the enigmatic past and present of withdrawal in a leading economy
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155255
https://www.transnat.org/post/shareholder-protection-in-close-corporations-and-the-curious-case-of-japan
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